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For the Confused: How to Save Money for the Future

We each realize that we had better save money however something so easy to say can be tricky to actually do.

Saving money is the foundation of building up your financial future. However, procrastination takes over. Those days become into years of lost money. The chances of accomplishing long-term financial goals and achieving financial security are quite small without saving money.

In order to save money, you have to take control your finances. Saving has little to do with how much you make. What saving has to do with is how you control your money. The fundamentals are simple: spend less than what you earn and save the difference. That is saving.

Now, what's a simple step by step process to make it work?

* Well, first, sit down and write down your financial goals on a piece of paper. Ask yourself what you want financially.

* Second, give each goal a dollar amount and with a time frame that is possible. Know what you are saving for because whatever your reason is has to be strong enough to keep you going

* Third, be sure to set up a separate savings account. This helps avoiding have the urge to spend it. Own a savings account that you could easily deposit or transfer money into by setting a direct-deposit. This is where banks will set up an automatic withdrawal. As time progresses, you will begin to see the money grow larger, easily with little effort. This is satisfying and gets you propelled to save even more.

* Fourth, having a written out budget is crucial for saving money as you see where your money is going and facilitates positive changes to the way you spend. A clear budget lets you know where you are spending and aid in your plan on how to save better.

Include into your budget a plan to reduce debt. Budgeting is part of saving and makes it simpler and if you do have heft amount of credit card debt, you had better focus eliminating that debt. It would be sensible to put a small amount aside for emergencies, but the majority of the money you are saving needs to be going towards the credit card debt. The argument on why is simple. Why pay up to 30% interest on a credit card debt when your savings accounts are only earning 2% to 10% in interest. In the end, you are losing. Wipe out that credit card debt first as it will save money on interest.

More people actually supercharge their savings by putting their unexpected money into their savings accounts. Work bonuses, raises, tax refunds, money gifts, and overtime can balloon up the figures in your savings.

There is no real secret or shortcut to saving money. Just do it. The first step is the hardest but after that- it only gets easier. Just remember to spend less than you earn and save the difference. Your finances begin to change for the better and the banks will start paying you interest for a change.